ary ald Reagan Libr Courtesy Ron POLICY BRIEF by George Bunn & John B. Rhinelander LAWS September 2007 Reykjavik Revisited: Toward a World Free of Nuclear Weapons It would be fine with At their October 1986 Reykjavik summit meeting, Ronald Reagan me if we eliminated all and Mikhail Gorbachev agreed orally that their two governments should "nuclear weapons. eliminate all their nuclear weapons. Reagan said, “It would be fine with me if we eliminated all nuclear weapons.” Gorbachev replied, “We can do that.” Reagan’s secretary of state, George Shultz, participated in the – Ronald Reagan, discussion. While that proposal later floundered over U.S. plans for October 1986 missile defense and differences over the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) " Treaty, the goal of going to zero nuclear weapons is highly relevant today.1 George Shultz, now at the Hoover Institution on the campus of Stanford University, organized a conference to review the goal of Reykjavik in October 2006, the 20th anniversary of the Reykjavik This policy brief made possible summit. He invited former high-level government officials and other by the Lawyers Alliance for World experts to consider major changes in current U.S. nuclear-weapon control Security, an independent partner and reduction policies, including the ultimate goal of a world free of of the World Security Institute. nuclear weapons. He had the assistance of Sidney Drell, a distinguished Stanford physicist who has long been an adviser to the U.S. government 1 The best treatment of this extraordinary meeting is Don Oberdorfer, The Turn (1991), chap. 5, 155-209, including page 202 for the Reagan- Gorbachev quotes (This has been republished under soft cover under the new title, From The Cold War To A New Era: The United States and the Soviet Union, 1983-1991). See also James E. Goodby, “The 1986 Reykjavik Summit,” Arms Control Today (September 2006), 49-51. World Security Institute: 1779 Massachusetts Ave., NW Suite 615 • Washington, DC 20036 | Ph: 202.332.0900 | Fax: 202.462.4559 1 WSI POLICY BRIEF L-R: Former Secretary of State George Shultz, former Secretary of Defense Wil- liam Perry, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and former Sen. Sam Nunn. “In today’s war waged on world order by terrorists, nuclear weapons are the ultimate means of mass devastation.” – Shultz, Perry, Kissinger, and Nunn, Wall Street Journal, Jan. 4, 2007 on nuclear matters, and another Stanford faculty plan and ballistic missile defense. The papers will be member, former Secretary of Defense William Perry. published as appendices to the October 2007 conference In the conference at the Hoover Institution, they were report. Finally, a third (international) conference is joined by a group of experts from many disciplines and planned for 2008 to receive feedback on what is, initially, backgrounds. The conclusion of this 2006 conference, an effort by Americans focused on the American “to rekindle the vision shared by Reagan and Mr. political scene. Gorbachev” at Reykjavik, was published as an op-ed in We believe the end product of this process should be the Wall Street Journal under the names of Shultz, Perry, useful to U.S. presidential candidates; to candidates for, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former and members of, Congress; to foreign governments; and Sen. Sam Nunn.2 The announcement of a plan to move to the general public. Consideration, debate, revisions toward zero nuclear weapons by four “realists” – two and in the end greater understanding of the underlying Republicans and two Democrats who had held high issues and the plan’s proposals should help set the government offices – received major attention in the stage for the next U.S. president who will take office in United States and differentiates their plan from earlier January 2009 and his or her counterparts around the proposals by others. For them, the plan represents a world. While cooperative efforts are essential for inter- dramatic evolution in their positions. In addition, they governmental success, U.S. presidential leadership will have credibility and access to the media and leaders in be indispensable given the past and present role of the the United States and around the world. Three weeks United States in the nuclear-weapon world. later Gorbachev responded enthusiastically in another op-ed in the Journal.3 We have therefore given our article I. The Hoover Plan the title of “Reykjavik Revisited” and refer to the initial What is the Hoover plan? It begins: Journal article as the “Hoover plan.” There will be a follow-on conference at the Nuclear weapons today present tremendous Hoover Institution in October 2007. Papers have been dangers, but also an historic opportunity. U.S. commissioned, covering the points in the plan dis- leadership will be required to take the world cussed in detail below, plus papers on verification, the to the next stage – to a solid consensus for joint international efforts necessary to implement the reversing reliance on nuclear weapons globally 2 See George P. Shultz, William J. Perry, Henry A. Kissinger and Sam Nunn, “A World Free of Nuclear Weapons,” The Wall Street Journal, January 4, 2007, which also contains the names of the other conference participants who approved the report: Martin Anderson, Steve Andreason, Michael Armacost, William Crowe, Sidney Drell, James Goodby, Thomas Graham Jr., Thomas Henriksen, David Holloway, Max Kampelman, Jack Matlock, John McLauglin, Don Oberdorfer, Rozanne Ridgway, Henry Rowen, Roald Sagdaev and Abraham Sofaer. 3 Mikhail Gorbachev, “The Nuclear Threat,” The Wall Street Journal, January 31, 2007. 2 www.worldsecurityinstitute.org as a vital contribution to preventing their 135, India 100, Pakistan 85, and North Korea 5.4 Israel, proliferation into potentially dangerous hands, India and Pakistan have never been parties to the NPT. and ultimately ending them as a threat to the North Korea was a party, but has withdrawn. Several world. states, including South Africa, which had produced six nuclear bombs, and Libya, which had a secret program It argues that the world is “now on the precipice that was far from producing enough fissile material of a new and dangerous nuclear era,” and that, most for a weapon, have renounced nuclear weapons and alarmingly, accepted international inspections. Iran’s present nuclear program is clearly challenging the basic purpose of the the likelihood that non-state terrorists will get NPT as is North Korea’s. However, more immediately their hands on nuclear weapons is increasing. In threatening in this age of increased terrorism is the fact today’s war waged on world order by terrorists, that there is enough plutonium and highly enriched nuclear weapons are the ultimate means of uranium (HEU) for over 300,000 nuclear weapons in mass devastation. the world based on conservative estimates of material needed for a single weapon, and over 580,000 nuclear The Hoover plan contends that terrorist groups weapons if less conservative estimates are used.5 Much with nuclear weapons were not foreseen in the 1950s of the material that is not already in nuclear weapons when the U.S. nuclear strategy against a nuclear-armed remains insecurely guarded, principally in Russia. Soviet Union was first developed. Such a terrorist To reinforce the NPT’s basic nonproliferation threat was “conceptually outside the bounds of a [U.S.] requirement and to deal more effectively with the deterrent strategy” at that time. Nor was the terrorist terrorist threat, the Hoover plan calls for the eventual threat a focus of the 1968 nuclear Non-Proliferation elimination of all nuclear weapons – after the United Treaty (NPT). In the early days of the treaty, the NPT’s States and other countries have taken many initial, proponents focused on persuading the many nations concrete steps to control, withdraw and reduce them. around the world that did not have nuclear weapons not to pursue them. And, to do so, the five NPT members “In 1986 during the Cold War, there were having nuclear weapons when the NPT was negotiated 65,000 nuclear weapons in the world, but – Britain, China, France, the Soviet Union (now Russia) and the United States – promise in Article VI “to pursue today there are less than half that, about negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating 27,000.” to the cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament…” If this goal of elimination were reached (and the plan In 1986 during the Cold War, there were 65,000 wisely sets no deadline), then the states possessing nuclear weapons in the world, but today there are less nuclear weapons would have fulfilled the above-quoted then half that, about 27,000. While admitting that the Article VI obligation of the NPT. The plan proposes estimates for some countries are uncertain, one source some initial steps that it says should be taken toward suggests the following approximate breakdown: Russia the elimination of nuclear weapons. Years of negotiation 16,000, U.S. 10,000, France 348, UK 200, China 200, Israel and implementation of specific agreements would be 4 Joseph Cirincione, Bomb Scare: The History & Future of Nuclear Weapons (Columbia University Press, 2007), 97, figure 5.2, 126. The French deploy 60 warheads on aircraft and 288 warheads on submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs). See Cirincione, above, 98, table 5.5. The UK deploys four nuclear submarines armed with 58 U.S.-supplied Trident missiles and up to 200 warheads. See Rebecca Johnson, “End of a Nuclear Weapons Era: Can Britain Make History?” Arms Control Today, April 2006, 6-12. China has 20 liquid-fueled ICBMs armed with single warheads capable of reaching targets in the United States; has maintained its warheads separate from its ICBMS (a de- alerting policy the United States should consider and urge on the Russians); and has persistently maintained a no-first-use declaratory policy.
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